- Jensen Huang orders Nvidia employees to automate every possible task using advanced AI tools
- Nvidia faces skepticism as investors worry about long-term AI demand stability
- Nvidia engineers rely heavily on the Cursor coding assistant for development
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has delivered a direct call to employees, asking them to rely on artificial intelligence for any task that can be automated.
He dismissed concerns that increased use of artificial intelligence could threaten jobs and described it as unrealistic for anyone to deliberately avoid these systems.
His remarks came during an all-hands meeting after Nvidia reported another set of record financial results.
AI Use Amid Market Cycle Doubts
“I understand that Nvidia has some executives telling their people to use less AI…Are you insane?” Jensen Huang said.
“I want every task possible to be automated with artificial intelligence, to be automated with artificial intelligence… I promise you, you will have work to do.”
He responded to internal reports of executives advising teams to reduce their reliance on AI tools, calling such advice misguided and unnecessary.
Huang’s comments come at a time when investors continue to question the sustainability of AI spending.
He noted that the company faces a situation where its performance is interpreted negatively, regardless of the outcome.
Nvidia delivered what he described as an exceptional quarter, followed by a drop in shares the next day, which he attributed to market doubts about how long demand for AI systems will last.
For Huang, a strong quarter is evidence of excessive optimism, while even a small miss would have intensified the narrative of a sector-wide bubble.
However, well-known investors outside the company have expressed concern. One such is Michael Burry, whose reputation stems from his early warnings during the housing crisis, warning that rapid innovation can ultimately undermine companies when too many competitors follow the same path.
But Huang asked employees to continue using AI even if the systems lack reliability in some scenarios, adding that sustained use can improve results.
Nvidia engineers currently rely on the Cursor coding assistant, and Huang believes they should continue to use similar tools in their day-to-day work.
Huang is not alone, as other large companies such as Microsoft, Meta, Google and Amazon share the same idea.
They have asked employees to integrate artificial intelligence into repetitive or automated workflows involving productivity tools and office software.
Nvidia’s message reflects a clear corporate direction and a broader shift across the technology sector, making AI essential rather than optional.
That said, the outcome of this strategy remains uncertain, and the comparison with previous technology cycles raises reasonable questions about long-term stability.
Via Fortune
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews and opinions in your feeds. Be sure to click the Follow button!
And of course you can too follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, video unboxings, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp also.



